Summary
View of the observing site, Solar Eclipse Expedition, Goondiwindi, Queensland, Sep 1922, prior to erection of temporary huts.
In 1922, Victorian Government Astronomer Joseph Baldwin led a Melbourne Observatory solar eclipse expedition to Goondiwindi, Queensland, joining with another group from Sydney Observatory.
The purpose of the expedition was to test Einstein's general theory of relativity. Einstein's theory predicted that the light travelling to us from stars should bend as it passed the Sun, due to the curvature in space-time created by the massive object. A solar eclipse expedition in 1919 had found such a bending of the light, but in 1922 it was still important to undertake confirming observations. The Goondiwindi expedition was not very successful, as they were unable to take sufficiently precise photographs to test the theory.
The US Lick Observatory's group at Wallal, Western Australia, succeeded in making observations that confirmed Einstein's theory.
Description of Content
Distant view of timber buildings in grounds, (faded sign on facade of building on right hand side may read Argus Office), canopied structure in foreground sheltering (weather?) equipment.
More Information
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Place & Date Depicted
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Organiser of Expedition
Melbourne Observatory, Birdwood Avenue, South Yarra, Greater Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 1922
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Format
Glass Negative, Quarter Plate, Black & White
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